A method of perforating a membrane 10 is presented. The method comprises: bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane 10, said substance inducing a membrane-denaturing reaction by a stimulus; providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature said membrane 10; perforating said membrane with a membrane-destroying member 1. The stimulus is carried through said membrane-destroying member 1. The present invention eliminates the influence of membrane-denaturing agent to the substance to be injected into the cell. The present invention also enables applying the stimulus locally, with a simple construction.

Patent
   7320885
Priority
Sep 09 1999
Filed
Sep 06 2000
Issued
Jan 22 2008
Expiry
Dec 13 2021
Extension
463 days
Assg.orig
Entity
Small
1
6
EXPIRED
1. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
selecting a site on a membrane;
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to said site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature the selected site of said membrane; and
perforating said denatured selected site of said membrane with a membrane-destroying member;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said membrane-destroying member from a light source.
37. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane;
perforating said denatured selected site of said membrane with a membrane-destroying member;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, wherein said light is carried through said membrane-destroying member from a light source, and wherein said membrane-destroying member is an intracellular sensor.
10. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
selecting a site on a membrane;
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to said site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance; and
providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature the selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source.
19. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
selecting a site on a membrane;
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to said site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane; and
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature the selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through a stimulus-carrying member from a light source, and said stimulus-carrying member locally introduces said stimulus to said selected site of said membrane.
41. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance; and
providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source, and wherein said supporting member is an intracellular sensor.
35. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane; and
perforating said denatured selected site of said membrane with a membrane-destroying member;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, wherein said light is carried through said membrane-destroying member from a light source, and wherein said membrane-destroying member is a capillary; and
wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
38. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane;
perforating said denatured selected site of said membrane with a membrane-destroying member;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said membrane-destroying member from a light source;
wherein said membrane-destroying member constitutes a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus, and wherein said membrane-destroying member is an intracellular sensor.
42. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance; and
providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source;
wherein said supporting member constitutes a membrane-destroying member for perforating the membrane and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus, and wherein said supporting member is an intracellular sensor.
39. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance; and
providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source, and wherein said supporting member is a capillary; and
wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
36. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
providing a stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane; and
perforating said denatured selected site of said membrane with a membrane-destroying member;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said membrane-destroying member from a light source;
wherein said membrane-destroying member constitutes a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus, and wherein said membrane-destroying member is a capillary; and
wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
40. A method of perforating a membrane comprising:
bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane;
said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance; and
providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane;
wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source;
wherein said supporting member constitutes a membrane-destroying member for perforating the membrane and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus, and wherein said supporting member is a capillary; and
wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
43. A microinjection method comprising:
perforating a membrane by bringing a membrane-denaturing substance into contact with or close proximity to at least a site of said membrane, said membrane being a cell membrane, intracellular membrane, or artificial lipid membrane, said bringing done by a supporting member for supporting said substance, and providing said stimulus to said substance so as to denature a selected site of said membrane and perforate said denatured selected site of said membrane, wherein said substance is a photosensitizer or photocatalyst and said stimulus is light, and wherein said light is carried through said supporting member from a light source;
injecting a desired substance inside the membrane;
wherein said substance to be injected into said membrane comprises a photosensitizer or photocatalyst as a membrane-denaturing substance that induces a membrane-denaturing reaction by light as a stimulus; and an additional substance; and
wherein said supporting member is a capillary, said method comprising filling the capillary with the substance to be injected, penetrating the tip of the capillary into the membrane, and injecting said substance into the membrane through the capillary.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein said light includes ultraviolet light.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein said membrane-destroying member constitutes a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein said membrane-destroying member is a capillary.
5. The method according to claim 3, wherein said membrane-destroying member is a capillary.
6. The method according to claim 4, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
7. The method according to claim 5, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein said membrane-destroying member is an intracellular sensor.
9. The method according to claim 3, wherein said membrane-destroying member is an intracellular sensor.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein said light includes ultraviolet light.
12. The method according to claim 10, wherein said supporting member constitutes a membrane-destroying member for perforating the membrane and a stimulus carrying member for carrying the stimulus.
13. The method according to claim 10, wherein said supporting member is a capillary.
14. The method according to claim 12, wherein said supporting member is a capillary.
15. The method according to claim 13, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
16. The method according to claim 14, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
17. The method according to claim 10, wherein said supporting member is an intracellular sensor.
18. The method according to claim 12, wherein said supporting member is an intracellular sensor.
20. The method according to claim 19, wherein said light includes ultraviolet light.
21. The method according to claim 19, wherein said stimulus carrying member constitutes a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance and a membrane-destroying member for perforating the membrane.
22. The method according to claim 19, wherein said stimulus-carrying member is a capillary.
23. The method according to claim 21, wherein said stimulus-carrying member is a capillary.
24. The method according to claim 22, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
25. The method according to claim 23, wherein said light transmits through the side wall of said capillary as a light guide, and said light is applied to said membrane-denaturing substance from the tip of said capillary.
26. The method according to claim 19, wherein at least one optical fiber extends along the length of said capillary, wherein a distal end of said fiber extends to the tip of said capillary so as to apply said light to said substance from the end of said fiber.
27. The method according to claim 19, wherein said stimulus-carrying member is an intracellular sensor.
28. The method according to claim 21, wherein said stimulus-carrying member is an intracellular sensor.
29. A microinjection method comprising:
perforating a membrane using the method as claimed in claim 1; and
injecting a desired substance inside the membrane;
wherein said desired substance comprises a photosensitizer or photocatalyst as a membrane-denaturing substance that induces a membrane-denaturing reaction when stimulated by light; and an additional substance.
30. The microinjection method according to claim 29, the method comprising filling a capillary with said desired substance to be injected, penetrating the tip of said capillary into the membrane, and injecting said desired substance into the membrane through said capillary.
31. A microinjection method comprising:
perforating a membrane using the method as claimed in claim 10; and
injecting a desired substance inside the membrane;
wherein said substance to be injected into said membrane comprises a photosensitizer or photocatalyst as a membrane-denaturing substance that induces a membrane-denaturing reaction when stimulated by light; and an additional substance.
32. The microinjection method according to claim 31, wherein said supporting member is a capillary, said method comprising filling the capillary with the desired substance to be injected, penetrating the tip of the capillary into the membrane, and injecting said desired substance into the membrane through the capillary.
33. A microinjection method comprising:
perforating a membrane using the method as claimed in claim 19; and
injecting a desired substance inside the membrane;
wherein said substance to be injected into said membrane comprises a photosensitizer or photocatalyst as a membrane-denaturing substance that induces a membrane-denaturing reaction when stimulated by light; and an additional substance.
34. The microinjection method according to claim 33, the method comprising filling a capillary with the desired substance to be injected, penetrating the tip of said capillary into the membrane, and said desired substance being injected into the membrane through said capillary.

This invention relates to a method and apparatus for perforating a membrane by partially treating the membrane such as cell membrane, with a membrane-denaturing agent, etc. It also relates to a microinjection apparatus using the method for perforating the membrane.

In gene therapy and artificial substance production systems using living organisms, means of introducing a nucleic acid, a protein, and such, into the interior of a cell are extremely important. On the other hand, techniques for extracting structures such as the nucleus of a cell, are also gaining wide attention. Therefore, it can be said the injecting and extracting substances into/from cells, the basic unit constituting organisms, is a fundamental technique of bioengineering.

In the prior art, the method of destroying or perforating the membrane depends on a physical shearing force. However, cell membrane destroying using the shear force of a capillary requires skilled experience on the part of manipulator. Also, in many cases, the capillary cannot be inserted into the cell membrane of normal cells, except large size egg cells, due to the flexibility of the cell membrane. In this regard, as a method that does not depend on the physical shear force, a method of denaturing a membrane with a substance (a membrane-denaturing agent) inducing a membrane-denaturing reaction is presented (PCT/JP99/01223). The membrane-denaturing agent is a substance that induces the membrane-denaturing reaction by a selected specific stimulus as a trigger. By controlling a degree of membrane denaturation, a perforating method allowing the self-repairing of the perforated membrane can be provided.

According to the method, the membrane-denaturing agent must be in contact with the cell or close thereto. In one embodiment, a photosensitizer as a membrane-denaturing agent is in contact with a site of cell via a capillary, and light is applied to the cell-neighboring area as a whole (for example, a circular region of about 100 micrometers including the cell contacting the capillary).

In this method, the light exposure is introduced such that an area including the capillary that contacts the membrane-denaturing agent is exposed. Therefore, if the capillary is filled with a mixture of a substance to be injected into the cell and the membrane-denaturing agent, the membrane-denaturing agent within the capillary as well as the membrane-denaturing agent on the tip of the capillary may be activated by the light application, thereby generating reactive oxygen species.

If the substance filled in the capillary to be injected into the cell is a chemically vulnerable substance such as genes and such, the substance may be damaged by the reactive oxygen species.

To avoid such damage, a light application method that allows a pinpoint light application to the tip of capillary may be employed. However, the method has disadvantages in that a light focus adjusting mechanism that follows the movement of the tip of capillary should be required and it makes the apparatus costly.

Therefore, the present invention relates to an improvement of the membrane-denaturing method with a membrane-denaturing substance inducing the membrane-denaturing reaction. An object of the present invention is to eliminate the influence of membrane-denaturing agent to the substance to be injected into the cell as low as possible.

Objects of the present invention are not limited to the above-mentioned object. For example, when the capillary or intracellular sensor is used in a tissue in vivo and such, it is difficult to apply stimulus such as the light to the tip of the capillary or sensor locally. Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus that enable locally applying the stimulus, with a simple construction.

Techniques of the present invention is characterized by carrying a stimulus to be introduced to a membrane-denaturing substance via a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance, or a membrane-destroying member for destroying the membrane, or other stimulus carrying member. By carrying a stimulus through a certain member, the stimulus can locally be introduced to a selected site. Though the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member and the stimulus-carrying member may be of individual elements, in one preferred aspect, the membrane-supporting member, the membrane-destroying member and the stimulus-carrying member are the same element.

A combination of a stimulus and a membrane-denaturing agent inducing the membrane-denaturing reaction by the stimulus, important constituting elements of the present invention, will be described based on light and a photosensitizing agent, a preferred example of such combination. As a method of partially and temporarily denaturing and/or disrupting the membrane other than the physical shear force, the phospholipid radical chain peroxidation came into attention. Reactive oxygen species such as singlet oxygen, and superoxide radicals peroxidize unsaturated phospholipids of the cell membrane by chain reactions. As countermeasures, cells have radical scavengers such as α-tocopherol (vitamin E), and L-ascorbic acid, a water soluble anti-oxidant, (vitamin C), superoxide dismutase (SOD) and such oxidation defense mechanism, to resist oxidation. When such chain peroxidation exceeds the oxidation defense capacity, phospholipid membrane disruption progressed rapidly in an exponential manner, and the cell becomes unable to maintain metabolism as the membrane loses its ion barrier function. If these chain reactions progress further, the cell will finally die.

Photosensitizers (PS) are molecules that trigger such lipid chain peroxidation by producing reactive oxygen species using light. Rose Bengal, porphyrin, and such can be given as photosensitizers in general use. By utilizing such photosensitizers as membrane-denaturing agents, when denaturing the membrane, it will be sufficient to conduct chain peroxidation partially on the minimum objective cell surface, for a short period of time. Furthermore, the membrane damaged by the chain peroxidation at the time of membrane perforation, is expected to be repaired after the perforation by the fluidity of the membrane itself, or by the aforementioned anti-oxidation systems. Thus, by controlling an amount of the photosensitizers or an exposure time of the light, a degree of membrane denaturation can be controlled, a perforation can easily be done, and the membrane can be repaired without causing cell death.

As a preferable combination of the membrane-denaturing agent and stimulus, the combination of the light and the photosensitizer was explained. However, the combination of the membrane-denaturing agent and stimulus used for denaturing or perforating the membrane can be selected as any combination, as long as it can perforate the membrane in a controllable manner, without completely destroying the membrane.

In one preferred embodiment, the membrane-denaturing agent is a photocatalyst such as titanium oxide, and the stimulus is the light that activates the photocatalyst (ultraviolet ray in case of titanium oxide). The photocatalyst promotes generation of reactive oxygen species with the light exposure. The cell membrane is oxidized with the reactive oxygen species and fluidity and flexibility of the membrane are reduced.

The stimulus of the present invention must be carried through the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus-carrying member. Preferably, the stimulus can be selected from the group comprising light, electricity, heat, and oscillations. If the stimulus is the light, the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus carrying member may be made of materials that allows the transmission of wavelengths inducing the membrane-denaturing reaction. For example, such material is selected from soda glass, quartz glass, acrylic resin, or styrole resin. If the stimulus is the heat, the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus carrying member may be made of materials having a good heat conductivity, such as gold, platinum, tungsten, aluminum, copper, any alloy of the mentioned metals, and ceramic material, for example. If the stimulus is the electricity, the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus carrying member may be made of materials having a good electric conductivity, such as gold, platinum, tungsten, aluminum, copper, any alloy of the mentioned metals, conducting polymer including polypyrrole and polythiophene, or carbon materials including carbon nanotube.

The stimulus used for the present invention is not limited to the above-mentioned examples. The stimulus includes electromagnetic waves including light, particle rays including radiation, heat, cooling, electricity, magnetism, oscillations including ultrasonic waves, physical contact, chemical substances, as well as living beings including the cell (white blood cell, for example), and viruses, or any combinations thereof. For example, a light-emitting element is provided at the tip of the capillary, an example of supporting member or membrane destroying member, and the power for emitting the element can be carried via the capillary.

As the substance (mainly compounds) that are used to denature and perforate the membrane, enzymes involved in membrane denaturation and disruption, antibody molecules, membrane bound proteins, glycoproteins, lipids, and such may be used. The photosensitizers such as porphyrin, rose Bengal, methylene blue, acid red, alpha-terthienyl, etc., or their derivatives may also be used. Oxidants such as reactive oxygen species, reductants, explosive compounds such as nitroglycerin/picric acid, magnetic particles/magnetic fluids, metal particles/semiconductor particles/insulator particles/photoelectric converting elements/piezoelectric elements, and such may also be suitably used. These compounds may be used alone or together with others.

Specifically, the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus-carrying member are a capillary (including a capillary having an optical fiber disclosed in the embodiment), an intracellular sensor, and such. In the specification, the capillary means a micro tubular member including the capillary made of glass, and the materials of the capillary are not limited. Also, the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus carrying member is not limited to the capillary and may be crystals, macro compounds such as C60, micro pipettes, glass micro electrodes, patch electrodes, metal micro electrodes, wires, crystal whiskers, living organisms including cells, magnetic particles/magnetic fluids, metal particles/semiconductor particles/insulator particles/piezoelectric elements, micro structures such as micro machines, as well as objects in which these are conjugated.

The forms of the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus-carrying member may not be limited. It may be kenzan (needlepoint flower holder)-shaped, spherical, needle-shaped, rod-shaped, tube-shaped, or may be provided in a combined shape thereof. Examples of tube-shaped supports are, specifically, pipettes, tubes, injection needles, and such. Spherical supports may be beads that can be handled by the laser tweezers technique. As to the supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance, a supporting site for supporting the membrane-denaturing substance (membrane denaturation accelerating site) may be on the support surface or may be a part of the surface, depending on the purposes (In case that the supporting member is a bead for example, such site may be a whole spherical surface, or a selected site.). When coating or fixing the membrane-denaturing substance to the supporting member, the methods that could be used are, solvent evaporation drying, sputtering, vacuum deposition, plasma polymerization, chemisorption, physisorption, radical polymerization, ion polymerization and such. The supporting member may be filled with the membrane-denaturing agent (For example, the supporting member is the capillary and the membrane-denaturing agent is filled inside the capillary).

According to the present invention, the stimulus should be carried via the supporting member, the membrane-destroying member or the stimulus-carrying member. Thus, desirably, the transmission direction of the stimulus should be controlled. As a direction-controllable stimulate, preferable examples are the light and the electricity. It will be explained in case that the membrane destroying member and the supporting member are the capillary for example. In case of light, if the capillary incorporated with an adequate reflection layer with a known optical fiber technique is used, the light transmits through the sidewall of the capillary in the extending direction thereof without the light leakage problem. In case of electricity, the direction of transmission can be controlled by providing an electrically insulating layer on a conductive layer and a site that is to be contact with the cell is not provided with the electrically insulating material. Also, in case of heat, the heat stimulus can be employed if a thermally insulating layer can be provided on a thermally conductive layer. In addition, a mechanical stimulus such as a super sonic vibration may be employed. For example, the following technique may be employed in which providing a microcapsule containing the cell membrane destroying agent, destroying the capsule with the vibration via the supporting member, and releasing the membrane-destroying agent.

The membrane may be a membrane containing photoelectric converting elements and piezoelectric elements, or may be cell membrane or cell wall of animals/plants, biomembranes, or artificial membranes. As a biomembrane, a cell coat including cell wall, cell membrane including intracellular cell membrane, nucleus membrane, viral membrane, cytoplasmic microtuble, microsome membrane, golgi apparatus membrane, lysosome membrane, endoplasmic reticulum membrane, tonoplast membrane, peroxysome membrane, plastid membrane, ribosome membrane, mitochondrial membrane, and such can be given. Examples of artificial membranes are protein membranes, lipid membranes, polymer membrane such as collagen, metal membranes, semiconductor membranes, insulator membranes, conductive polymer membranes such as polyacetylene, polythiophene, and such.

Substances that are to be injected can be any substances that could not permeate the membrane easily by normal diffusion, or substances that are to be passed through the membrane artificially in large amounts. Specific examples are nucleic acids, proteins, lipids, membrane structures, and artificial substances such as micro machines and magnetic particles. Optionally, a carrier could be injected together with the substances to be injected. The carriers are gases, liquids, or solids that can be used to dissolve, or suspend the substance to be injected. Examples of carriers are buffers and such in which nucleic acids are dissolved.

FIG. 1A is a schematic view showing a preferred embodiment of a microinjection apparatus;

FIG. 1B shows locations of an end wall of a sidewall of capillary and optical fibers;

FIG. 1C shows a denatured site formed on a membrane;

FIGS. 2A-D show a process of injecting a tip of a capillary into a cell membrane;

FIG. 3 is a flow chart showing a membrane perforating technique;

FIG. 4 is a schematic view showing another preferred embodiment of a microinjection apparatus;

FIGS. 5A-D is a schematic view showing a process of injecting a water-soluble fluorescent dye agent into a cell; and

FIG. 6 is a graph showing a success rate of injection in which blank: capillary without a titanium oxide film, 120nm: capillary with a 120nm-thick titanium oxide film, 180nm: capillary with a 180nm-thick titanium oxide film, and UV: one minute ultraviolet ray exposure.

FIGS. 1A-C are a schematic view showing a preferred embodiment of a microinjection apparatus employing the present invention. According to the embodiment, the light is selected as the stimulus, and the photosensitizer agent is selected as the membrane-denaturing agent.

Referring to FIGS. 1A-C and 4, the microinjection apparatus includes a capillary 1, a common member, which constitutes a membrane-destroying member, a supporting member for supporting the membrane-denaturing agent, a stimulus-carrying member, and an injection member for injecting a pre-selected substance. A distal end of the capillary 1 is tapering, and an opening diameter of the tip of capillary is several hundreds nanometers. At a proximal end of the capillary 1, optical fibers 4 are provided and opposed to an end wall 3 of a sidewall 2 of the capillary 1. A proximal end of the optical fibers 4 are provided with a light source 5, and the light from which transmits through the optical fibers 4 and is supplied to the end wall 3 of the side wall 2 of the capillary 1 in the direction of the length of the side wall 2 toward the tip of the capillary 1. The light is carried to the tip of the capillary 1 through the sidewall 2 as a light guide.

In the figure, four optical fibers 4 opposed to the end wall 3 and uniformly spaced in the circumferential direction are disclosed. The number of the optical fibers 4 is not limited to four, and it may be three or less than three, or five or more than five.

An outer circumferential surface of the sidewall 2 of the capillary 1 is provided with a short cylindrical bracket 6 at the proximal end. The outer wall of the bracket 6 has a site on which is threads are formed. Threads that are threaded to the threads on the bracket are formed in an inner wall of a cylindrical supporter 7 at an opening end that supports the optical fibers 4. When the supporter 7 is connected to the bracket 6, the distal end of the optical fibers 4 are opposed and in proximity to the end wall 2 of the sidewall of the capillary 1.

Inside the capillary 1, an injection liquid 8 including the photosensitizer (the injection liquid contains substance to be injected into the cell, such as gene) is filled. The apparatus is provided with pressure means 9 that introduces pressure to an inner space of the capillary 1.

A method of injecting the desired substance into the cell with above-constructed microinjection apparatus will be describe in conjunction with the FIGS. 1A-C, 2A-D and 3. FIGS. 2A-D show the membrane member and only the distal site of the capillary. As shown in FIGS. 1A-C and 2A-D, reference numeral 10 denotes a cell membrane as an example of membrane structure. FIG. 3 is a flow chart showing the microinjection technique. In FIG. 3, the capillary 1 is described as the supporting member.

Referring to FIGS. 1A-C and 2A, during the injection operation, the capillary 1 is in contact with the cell membrane 10 at a low speed (7 micrometer/sec, for example) so that the tip of the capillary does not perforate the cell membrane 10 physically. In this state, the injection liquid 8 containing the photosensitizer is ejected onto the cell membrane 10 (see FIG. 2B). The photosensitizer contacts the cell membrane and then diffuses. Because the activated oxygen can be diffused to a certain distance after generation thereof, the denaturing effect can be obtained even if the membrane is spaced from where the activated oxygen is generated (a few micrometers, for example). Therefore, the photosensitizer, as the membrane denaturing substance, does not necessarily directly contact the membrane. Means for introducing the injection liquid containing the photosensitizer is not limited to the forcible means with pressure means. It may be effected on the cell by the natural diffusion. Also, in place of pressuring, an injection by an electric current such as electroporesis may be used.

Referring to FIGS. 1A-C and 2A-D, at the same time, the light stimulus supplied from the light source 5 is introduced to the side wall 2 of the capillary from the end wall 3 of the side wall 2 of the capillary 1, and then carried to the tip of the capillary 1 though the side wall 2 as a light guide. Then the light is applied from the distal end of the sidewall 2. Only an exposed site within the cell membrane 10 that is in contact with the photosensitizer is denatured by the photosensitizer to form a membrane-denatured site 11.

Referring to FIGS. 1A-C and 2C, because the membrane-denatured site 11 is deteriorated and its flexibility is reduced, by moving the capillary 1 at a low speed, the tip of the capillary 1 is easily injected into the cell membrane. In this state, the liquid 8 containing the photosensitizer is injected into the cell membrane with the pressure means 9. Then, the tip of the capillary 1 is removed from the cell membrane, and the perforated cell membrane 10 will recover by itself to return the original state (see FIG. 2D).

According to the embodiment, the capillary 1 on the market that does not have a clad layer was used, and in fact the light may leak from the sidewall 2. However, the leakage site is concentrated on a transitional bent site (5 mm from the tip) of the sidewall 2 between a straight site and a tapering site. Because the volume of the liquid that is to be injected into the cell is very small amount, an influence of the leakage site is not significant. In this regard, if the membrane-destroying member (supporting member) is constructed from the micro capillary-shaped optical fiber, which may be made of the ordinary optical fiber extended and sharpen by the heating process similar to the capillary, the light leakage problem may be eliminated.

FIG. 4 is a schematic view showing another preferred embodiment of a microinjection apparatus employing the present invention. According to the embodiment, similar to the first embodiment, the light is selected as the stimulus, and the photosensitizer agent is selected as the membrane-denaturing agent.

In the embodiment, inside the capillary 2, an optical fiber 4 extends in the length of the capillary 2 centrally. A distal end of the fiber 4 extends to the tip of the capillary 2. According to this configuration, the light, as the stimulus, transmits through the optical fiber 4 and is applied to the photosensitizer in contact with the membrane so that the substance to be injected such as genes is not badly affected.

FIGS. 5A-D show still another embodiment of the present invention. According to this embodiment, photocatalyst is provided on outer surface of the sidewall of the capillary 1 and the photocatalyst is activated by the irradiation. In one preferable example, the photocatalyst is titanium oxide, and the irradiation as the stimulus is selected from the lights having a wavelength activating the titanium oxide. A site to be covered by the photocatalyst is the tip of the capillary, especially a site to be in contact with the membrane. In the figure, an injection liquid 8 containing a water-soluble fluorescent dye (Lucifer Yellow CH 2 milimolar concentration) is injected into a cell of the established neuron-like cell line PC 12. PC12 cells are used as a model of the central nervous system and are ganglia-like cells of Rat adrenal medulla origin. The cell is temporarily oxidized by the photocatalyst to denature the property of the cell, and then, it is possible to penetrate the cell membrane 10 by contacting the capillary with the surface of the cell even at a low speed.

FIG. 6 shows the success rate of the injection with regard to the thickness of titanium oxide film formed on the sidewall of the capillary. An aim of the FIG. 6 is to show the effect of the photocatalyst and the data in FIG. 6 was obtained by directly applying the light to the capillary and not by applying the light through the wall of the capillary as the light guide. Under such approach conditions where the membrane perforation by the physical force is difficult, the success rate of injection using the photosensitizing mechanism was compared. During the injection operation, the moving range of the manipulator was set so that it is possible for the capillary to penetrate into the cell at the speed of 1000 micrometers/s. Then, the capillary was approached at the low speed of 7 micrometers/s to contact the cell membrane without mechanically perforating the cell membrane. In the experiments, comparative tests as to how the success rate of the injection is changed with/without titanium oxide film on the capillary, and with/without one-minute light exposure by the 100 W mercury ramp were conducted.

The results are shown in FIG. 6. In FIG. 6, the horizontal axis indicates the injection treatment conditions, and the vertical axis shows the success rate of the injection (unit: %). When the capillary was not coated with the titanium oxide, the success rate of the injection was about 10%. On the other hand, when the capillary was coated with titanium oxide of 120 nanometers thickness, the success rate was 40% with one-minute ultraviolet ray exposure. Also, when the capillary was coated with titanium oxide of 120 nanometers thickness without the light exposure, the success rate of the injection was about 10%, and an improvement was not recognized. When the capillary was coated with titanium oxide of 180 nanometers thickness, the success rate of the injection was 60% with one-minute ultraviolet ray exposure. Also, even without the light exposure, the success rate of the injection was about 20%. Presumably, it is because the photocatalyst was activated by the room light, thereby improving the success rate of the injection.

According to the conducted microinjection experiment, the success rate of the injection was about 20%, without coating the capillary with titanium oxide, or without the ultraviolet ray exposure. Compared to this effort, the success rate of the injection was about 60% at maximum with the use of titanium oxide and the light exposure. It means that the titanium oxide facilitated the perforation of the cell membrane with the ultraviolet ray exposure. It is said that the photocatalytic activation of titanium oxide proportionally increases relative to the thickness of the film up to 2 micrometers. The present test also shows that the success rate of the injection becomes higher with the thicker film. The test strongly suggests that the photocatalytic activation was effective for improving the efficiency of the microinjection.

According to the present invention, due to the membrane denaturation, it is possible to conduct membrane perforation with such a weak shear force as exerted when the capillary contacts the cell membrane, thereby allowing the perforation of the membrane without depending on the physical shear force. Therefore, the present invention can be used for the microinjection apparatus and such. In one preferred application, the present invention is used for introducing genes into the cells.

Saito, Takashi

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Feb 18 2002SAITO, TAKASHICenter for Advanced Science and Technology Incubation, LTDASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0128270922 pdf
Apr 01 2004Center for Advanced Science and Technology Incubation, LTDToudai TLO, LtdCHANGE OF NAME SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0185740927 pdf
Aug 03 2011Toudai TLO, LtdAkita Prefectural UniversityASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS 0267200664 pdf
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